A
History of Swimming
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When
Flying Gull winged past Tobacco, swimming the length of a
130-foot pool in thirty seconds, Londoners were flabbergasted.
The year was 1844, and swimming was already established as
a popular competitive sport in England. But British athletes
generally relied on the sedate breaststroke for traveling
in the water, and were rather shocked at the exhibition staged
by this group of North American Indians that had been invited
to London by the Swimming Society in England.
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Totally un-European
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One
observer found their swimming "totally un-European,"
declaring that the Indians "thrashed the water violently
with their arms, like sails of a windmill, and beat downward
with their feet, blowing with force and forming grotesque
antics." Even though the style of Flying Gull and Tobacco
was considerably faster, it was not copied, and British swimmers
continued paddling along in their accustomed manner. It was
not until some forty years later that the Indians' "totally
un-European" style was reintroduced as the crawl: a stroke
so rapid that it revolutionized competitive swimming.
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this revolutionary advancement was really centuries old. The
original inhabitants of the Americas, West Africa and some Pacific
islands had been using a the of crawl for generations, while
Europeans had limited their swimming to the breast and side
strokes essentially modifications of what must have been man's
first method of keeping his head above water: the "dog
stroke" learned from animals. Although this four-legged
paddling style came naturally to many animals, it was at best
for man a churning, thrashing and tiring means of getting from
one bank of a river to the other. |
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Mosaics
and drags from early Middle Eastern civilizations depict men
swimming with the dog stroke, as do mosaics at Pompeii. Although
swimming was not included in the ancient Olympic Games, the
Greeks practiced the sport, holding it in high regard, as
they did all athletic endeavors. In fact, one of the most
biting insults one Greek could unleash on another was to discuss
him as a man who "neither knew how to run nor swim."
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Plato
considered a man who didn't know how to swim uneducated.
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There
are frequent representations of swimmers in the Vatican, Borgian
and Bourbon codices, and the murals of the Tepantitla House
at Teotihuacan (near Mexico City) showed men splashing about
the waters of "Tlalocan," paradise of Tlaloc, the
god of water. Both Julius Caesar and Charlemagne were known
as great swimmers, and Louis XI frequently took swims in the
Seine.
By
1837 regular swimming competitions were being held in London,
organized by the National Swimming Society in England, and
there were about six artificial pools in the city. As the
sport grew in popularity many more pools were built, and when
a new governing body, the Amateur Swimming Association of
Great Britain, was organized in 1880, it numbered more than
300 member clubs. Despite any impression Flying Gull and Tobacco
may have made with their "windmill thrashing," the
English continued to use the breaststroke. They swam it in
the traditional manner, with the arms underwater, pulling
out and back from the chest, coordinated with a frog kicking
motion.
In
a time when endurance exploits were prized higher than races
against time, the supreme test was the English Channel - the
Channel was considered impossible to swim. On August 24, 1875,
Captain Matthew Webb slipped into the water at Dover, England,
and 1 hours and 45 minutes later touched land at Cape Gris
ez, France, bcoming the first man to conquer the English Channel.
Relying mainly in the breaststroke, he swam some 38 miles
in covering a straightline distance of about 20 miles.
It
wasn't an uneventful trip. Along the way, Captain Webb sang,
sipped coffee and beer, ate steaks, was stung by a jellyfish
and had to fight his way through a nasty storm.
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was 31 years before another successful crossing by Burgess.
Sullivan was the first American. The present record for the
swim is 10 hours 50 minutes, set in 1950 by an Egyptian, Hassan
Abdel Rehim. While Flying Gull and Tobacco failed to make English
swimmers speed conscious, some South American Indians - indirectly
- succeeded. During a trip to South America, J. Arthur Trudgen
noticed that the Indians generated much more speed in the water
with their overhand stroke than he had produced with the breaststroke
as an amateur swimmer in England. |
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he apparently failed to note that this overhand stroke was coupled
with a distinctive up-and-down kicking motion. Historians dispute
the time of Trudgen's trip, dating it anywhere from the 1870's
to the 1890's. But most importantly, upon his return to England,
Trudgen began teaching others the new arm movement. Even though
swimmers continued using the frog kick of the breaststroke,
the overhand arm action gave them significantly more speed and
power. Using the Trudgen stroke - as it came to be called -
swimmers whittled the record for the 100 yards down from about
70 seconds to 60 seconds. |
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Trudgen's
teachings turned the swimming emphasis from endurance to speed,
but the revolution was only half complete. The leader in the
rest of the battle was another Englishman, Frederic Cavill.
Using the traditional breaststroke, Cavill became a well known
swimmer in England, and in 1878 emigrated to Australia, where
he built pools and taught swimming. Just before the turn of
the century, Cavill and his family-which included six sons,
made a trip to some of the islands of the South Seas. Like
Trudgen, he noticed that the natives used an overhand stroke.
But Cavill was more observant; he realized that their kicking
action was also different, and he closely studied it. Returning
to Australia, Cavill taught his sons the new stroke, and they
soon were splashing past all existing records. One of the
sons, Richard, went to England in 1902 and swam the 100 yards
in 58.8, a time his competition, using the less powerful Trudgen
stroke, couldn't approach.
Asked
to describe the revolutionary style, one of the Cavills said
it was "like crawling through the water." Gradually
it became known as the crawl, and only somewhat modified is
the freestyle stroke used today, the basis of swimming competitions.
Cavill's
sons were efficient evangelists, and their stroke soon became
widely adopted. One son, Sidney, went to San Francisco, California,
in 1903 to coach at the Olympic Club. An early pupil, J. Scott
Leary, became the first American to swim 100 yards in 80 seconds,
and won 17 consecutive races. Charles M. Daniels, who before
Leary's debut had been the U.S.'s leading swimmer, studied
the new stroke and eventually came up with his "American"
crawl. Daniels went on to win four gold medals in the Olympic
Games and shaved the world record for the 100 yards to 54.8
seconds in 1910. A few years later, when Duke Kahanamoku of
Hawaii began out-swimming all international competition, someone
asked who had taught him the crawl stroke. Kahanamoku, winner
of the Olympic 100-meter race in 1912 and 1920, replied, "No
one." He had learned the crawl as a child by watching
how the older natives of his home island swam, where, he said,
the stroke had been used for "many, many generations."
Kahanamoku set his records using a six-beat cycle, which is
now considered the classical freestyle form. Each complete
cycle of his arms (entering the water, pulling and recovering)
was accompanied by six flutter kicks.
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the 1924 Paris Games, a gangly, 20-year-old American named Johnny
Weissmuller pounded past Kahanamoku with this same six-beat
cycle, winning the 100 meters in the Olympic record time of
59 seconds flat. Weissmuller picked up two more gold medals
at the same Games, and won two at the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics.
The 1920's was the Golden Age of Sports and Weissmuller was
its golden swimmer. He set world records in 67 different events,
from 50 yards to 880 yards, before trading swimming for swinging
through trees and even greater fame as Hollywood's most durable
Tarzan. |
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The
basic, six-beat cycle crawl of Kahanamoku's and Weissmuller's
day has changed little; Don Schollander of the United States
was using it when he splashed to four gold medals at the 1864
Tokyo Olympics. At the first modem Olympic Games in 1896 only
the freestyle events were held, with the competitors relying
on various interpretations of the breast or Trudgen stroke.
In 1900 a backstroke event was added, and with the crawl becoming
the dominant freestyle form, the breast stroke was made a
separate competition in 1904. Women's freestyle races were
first included in the 1912 Games, and eventually their events
grew to include all the regular competition strokes. The breaststroke
was done in the traditional manner until the early 1930's,
when some swimmers discovered that they could get an extra
boost going into the turns by digging into the water with
a double overhead arm stroke. The coach at Iowa University
of the United States, Dave Armbruster, and one of his swimmers,
Jack Seig, toyed with this "butterfly" arm action
and developed a new kick to go with it called the "dolphin"
- a sort of undulating motion from hips to the toes.
Originally,
the butterfly was a novelty, as it was considered too tiring
to swim for any distance. But it proved to be considerably
faster than the conventional breaststroke, and by 1938 swimmers
using the butterfly arm action, often combined with the usual
frog kick, were dominating breaststroke races. Eventually,
in 1953, they were made into separate competitions; the breaststroke
became known as the "silent stroke," for swimmers
found that they could make much better time underwater than
on top. It was faster, but hard on the lungs.
Breaststrokers
stayed underwater as long as possible, and some either passed
out or finished races rather blue in the face. A few years
later, the rules were again changed, so that the breaststroke
had to be swum with the head out of the water. The butterfly
was first raced as a separate Olympic competition at the 1956
Melbourne Games, and today is usually swum using the dolphin
kick. Since its first appearance at the 1900 Olympic Games,
the backstroke has changed little. It is the only swimming
competition that starts with a push off the wall of the pool
instead of a dive. Its leg action is essentially an upside-down
variation of the crawl's flutter kick, with the arms reaching
up and out of the water. Adolph Kiefer, who dominated backstroke
swimming from 1935 to 1945, got his thrust by pulling with
his arms held straight in the water. But recently Australian
backstrokers discovered that they could get more horizontal
thrust by slightly bending the arm as it came around underwater,
and their style has been generally adopted by other swimmers.
New
training methods have helped track and field athletes reach
astonishing levels of performance in recent years, and many
of the same techniques have made modern swimming records fragile
as soap bubbles. "Tarzan" Johnny Weissmuller, conqueror
of elephants, apes and numerous swimming marks, today could
be beaten at any distance over 100 meters by a 13-year-old
California school girl, Sue Pederson. The women's record in
the 1,500 meters freestyle is now less than the men's mark
of fifteen years ago. Records and the ages of leading swimmers
seem to be shrinking at an equally heady pace.
Reprinted
with permission by the International Swimming Hall of Fame
from "Weissmuller to Spitz;" The History of Swimming,
which was edited from "The World of Sports," Mexico
XIX, Olympiad 8
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